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module #4 Canopy Management and Thinning. Pine Silvopasture in the Southeast . Canopy management. Canopy management is an essential element of maintaining a productive silvopasture
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module #4 Canopy Management and Thinning Pine Silvopasture in the Southeast
Canopy management • Canopy management is an essential element of maintaining a productive silvopasture • While cool season grasses can thrive at higher canopy densities (more shade), warm season grasses require more sunlight • Even forage in silvopasture “alleys” can be affected by shade from tree rows {Lecture 4b} Slide: 2/12
Canopy density A 25% to 60% canopy is needed to sustain warm to cool season grasses • As the trees planted in a silvopasture system begin to grow, their canopies produce more shade • While pruning trees helps to open up the canopy, thinning is also necessary to maintain forage production and develop higher-quality timber {Lecture 4b} Slide: 3/12
Measuring Canopy Density • A spherical densiometer is a tool used to measure and calculate canopy density—which is more accurate than “eyeballing” • The instrument has a convex mirror with intersecting lines that form a 24 point grid. Because the mirror is convex, it reflects the canopy overhead. As there may be some variation between types, follow manufacturers instructions {Lecture 4b} Slide: 4/12
Using a Spherical Densiometer • Hold the densiometer level in front of the body • Count and record the number of grid squares that are more than ¾ filled and divide this number by 24 (the total number of grid squares) • to calculate the percent coverage. • Or…you can multiply the number • of “empty” squares (those less than • ¼ filled) by 4.17 and subtract this number from 100 to give you the percentage of canopy cover. Multiple readings can be averaged to get a canopy density % for the site or the particular plots you are estimating. {Lecture 4b} Slide: 5/12
When to Thin Planting arrangement plus tree growth dictates thinning schedule • When canopy closure begins reaching 50% (per densiometer readings) a thinning should be considered • Pines on good sites can be typically be thinned when they reach 12-15 years {Lecture 4b} Slide: 6/12
Thinning for Silvopasture If trees were planted initially at 150-200 trees per acre, only one thinning may be necessary well into the rotation (20 years) to remove poles or saw/veneer quality logs and provide additional space for 10 more years of growth for the high quality saw logs that are left. A 20 year old stand after final thinning {Lecture 4b} Slide: 7/12
When to Thin • If the stand was more densely planted, thinning may be needed every 5-7 years to remove canopy, improve tree quality, and sustain forage production {Lecture 4b} Slide: 8/12
Thinning for Conversion • If you are converting an existing forest or pine plantation to a silvopasture, trees may be thinned to an optimal density for forage production • Trees must be selected and removed to open the canopy to at least 30 to 35 percent to establish forage {Lecture 4b} Slide: 9/12
Prescribed burning After any major pruning or thinning operation, large amounts of slash/debris may build up. A prescribed burn after a thinning is an efficient way to clean up debris. Stand after prescribed burn {Lecture 4b} Slide: 10/12
Planning Ahead Forage alleys eventually serve as access roads for thinning and harvest which reduces the need for additional clearing and road construction for logging operations. {Lecture 4b} Slide: 11/12
Summary • Canopy management is critical for successful forage growth in a silvopasture • Well-executed pruning and thinning will create high-quality trees for timber as well as high-quality forage for livestock • Having the proper equipment for these tasks is imperative. • If you have questions, you may contact your county or district forestry office or a private forestry consultant for recommendations on pre-commercial thinning and marketing your timber Advantages: {Lecture 4b} Slide: 12/12